The Texas Tribuneâ 32%
Houston ICE killing follows increase in street arrestsâ 27%
By Alex Nguyenâ 69% Colleen DeGuzmanâ 62% Alex Fordâ 54% https:â 47% www.texastribune.org#author-194â 54% www.texastribune.orgâ 47% #â 43% schemaâ 42% personâ 43% e22f202ba8aacb09ea1e530fddd7508dâ 54% d9e5bbbcee02c78f28f4c6516553c692â 54% 96c3b04749c92451b66002b2799ebbb6â 54%
7/10/2026, 11:18:46 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 0 faulty reasoning types, including no named faulty reasoning patterns yet, with no single egregious example has been isolated yet. Analysis detected 0 faulty-reasoning hits from 1,201 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 39.6% and a BS Rank of â 27% (10,361 of 14,190 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 73.00% of the article peer group.
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Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Texas and across the country have increasingly targeted people who are not already in law enforcement custody, according to a Texas Tribune analysis of federal data.
In Houston, where the killing of an immigrant by an ICE agent has garnered national attention, the monthly number of ICE arrests outside of detention facilities has more than quadrupled, even as in-custody arrests are still more common. The number of arrests in public spaces and homes jumped from a monthly average of 150 under former President Joe Biden to more than 640 under the first 13 months of the Trump administration. Those made up nearly a third of all ICE arrests in the city as of early March 2026, rising from 16% under Biden.
Statewide, the share of community arrests jumped from 14% to 36% of all arrests. Meanwhile, the increase nationwide was smaller, growing from 34% to 43%.
This shift in strategy from jail pickups to arrests in broad daylight can raise risks of violent altercations in public places, an immigration professor and immigration lawyer warn.
Thatâs what happened this week when ICE agents fatally shot 52-year-old Lorenzo Salgado Araujo in Houston, they said.
âThe shooting of the gentleman in Houston is exactly the tragic outcome to the kind of on-the-street encounter between ICE and residents of local communities that has become increasingly common â but also increasingly violent,â said CĂ©sar CuauhtĂ©moc GarcĂa-HernĂĄndez, an immigration law professor at Ohio State University.
Salgadao Araujo, a father of three, was driving his van to work Tuesday morning when ICE agents in unmarked black vehicles stopped them. A Mexican citizen who had lived in Houston for 35 years, he had no criminal record. He was also not the target immigration agents were looking for when they stopped his van, and his son said he was also in the process of obtaining legal residency.
An updated review of federal immigration data through early March 2026 by the Tribune also found arrests of people with criminal convictions in Houston fell from 61% under Biden to 39% under Trump.
Additionally, overall arrests in Houston and Texas have increased in the last year. In February 2026, ICE made around 7,100 arrests, of which 1,660 were in Houston. Thatâs a substantial increase in arrests from February 2025, when ICE made nearly 4,200 arrests, of which nearly a third were in Houston.
The Tribune analyzed federal government data obtained by the Deportation Data Project, a group of immigration lawyers and professors. The data is aggregated directly from government immigration agencies through Freedom of Information Act requests, the group says.
The Department of Homeland Security, in a statement on Friday, disputes the projectâs data.
âThis data is being cherry-picked by the Deportation Data Project to peddle a false narrative,â the department said. âDHS nor ICE have verified the accuracy, methodology or the analysis of the project and its results. The bottom line is that the Deportation Data Project is not accurate.â
The local criminal justice system has long served as an easy spot for immigration agents to find and send undocumented immigrants into ICE custody. But immigration and legal experts say federal officers have shifted their strategy to keep up with the administrationâs demand for thousands of ICE arrests a day.
In particular, immigrants are less likely to commit crimes compared to U.S. citizens so GarcĂa-HernĂĄndez said ICE may be running into a âmathematical limitation.â
âTo meet the aggressive and historically unprecedented deportation promises that the Trump administration has made, ICE has to start targeting people who are not on the radar of the local police or incarcerated,â he said.
And as the administration shifts to more ânon-custodialâ ICE arrests â which are arrests of people who arenât already in state or federal custody â PaĂșl Pirela, a Houston-based immigration lawyer, said this tactic can lead to more dangerous altercations.
âBy doing the non-custodial arrest and doing these public raids in crowded areas, mistakes will happen and then youâre putting people in danger,â Pirela said.
Pirela also said they risk more racial profiling.
âAnd the dangerous part is that it could lead to more violence,â he added.
Salgado was fatally shot in Houstonâs east end, a predominantly Latino neighborhood. Pirela also said ICE presence and ICE raids have been concentrated in Harris Countyâs other Latino neighborhoods, such as north Houston and Humble, a town about 20 miles northeast of downtown Houston.
Overall, GarcĂa-HernĂĄndez also attributed the sharp rise in non-custody arrests in Texas to the stateâs major immigrant population, which he said provides federal agents more targets for arrests.
Texas, home to the second-largest population of undocumented immigrants in the country â with more than 1.6 million of the estimated 13.7 million nationally â has become a focus of Trumpâs promise to carry out the largest mass deportation operation in the countryâs history.
And Harris County is estimated to have more than 600,000 undocumented residents, placing it second to Los Angeles County, according to a 2025 report from Migration Policy Institute.
âThe fact there are large migrant population centers in Texasâs urban centers and that these are people who are waking up every morning and leaving home to go to work means that it is much easier to spot these individuals,â GarcĂa-HernĂĄndez said.
In addition, he said, Republican leaders in Texas have long welcomed ICE agents to the state by reducing barriers of immigration enforcement operations.
Most recently, Gov. Greg Abbott threatened to withdraw funding from Houston and two other major cities earlier this year over policies that he said limited police cooperation with ICE. Civil rights groups said Houston then gutted its ordinance â which directed local officers not to prolong traffic stops and other encounters to give federal agents time to respond to suspected undocumented individuals â to keep $114 million in public safety grants.
Alex Nguyen is a general assignment reporter with a focus on criminal justice. Before joining the newsroom in 2025, she was a breaking news reporter at The Dallas Morning News. She previously was a reporting...
Colleen DeGuzman is a general assignments reporter. In addition to covering a broad range of topics, she focuses on immigration developments in the state. Before joining the newsroom, Colleen was an enterprise...
More by Colleen DeGuzman
Alex Ford is a designer/developer on the data visual team based in Austin. Previously, she was an interactive designer at NBC News Digital and NBC Local. A Baltimore native, she is a graduate of the University...
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CĂ©sar CuauhtĂ©moc GarcĂa-HernĂĄndez
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